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-rw-r--r--web/tutorials/using-clay-with-hakyll.markdown17
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/web/tutorials/using-clay-with-hakyll.markdown b/web/tutorials/using-clay-with-hakyll.markdown
index e557c3d..c676a80 100644
--- a/web/tutorials/using-clay-with-hakyll.markdown
+++ b/web/tutorials/using-clay-with-hakyll.markdown
@@ -13,15 +13,25 @@ the CSS. This would be an example of such a file:
``` haskell
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
import Clay
-import qualified Data.Text.Lazy.IO as T
test :: Css
test = ...
main :: IO ()
-main = T.putStr $ render test
+main = putCss test
```
+If you prefer the compact version, you're going to have an extra import:
+
+
+``` haskell
+import qualified Data.Text.Lazy.IO as T
+
+main :: IO ()
+main = T.putStr $ renderWith compact test
+```
+
+
Let's assume such a file is called `css/foo.hs`. In our compiled site, we want
to map this to `css/foo.css`. Hence, the route is a simple `setExtension`. For
compilation, we simply pass the Clay file through `runghc` with no options.
@@ -30,6 +40,9 @@ compilation, we simply pass the Clay file through `runghc` with no options.
match "css/*.hs" $ do
route $ setExtension "css"
compile $ getResourceString >>= withItemBody (unixFilter "runghc" [])
+
+-- cabal sandbox users can use (unixFilter "cabal" ["exec", "runghc"])
+-- given that you've added cabal to your PATH
```
The major advantage of using this method (as opposed to importing the Clay files